In most Supreme Court cases, the majority opinion gets infinitely more attention than the dissenting one. However, the dissent penned by Ruth Bader Ginsburg in Burwell v. Hobby Lobby is not most opinions.

The case, in which the a 5-4 majority on the court ruled that private companies can claim a religious exemption to providing certain types of birth control to employees, instantly sparked massive outrage among the pro-choice community. Ginsburg’s impassioned, 35-page dissent managed to encapsulate that sentiment perfectly, and, unlike most documents coming out of the nation’s highest court, it went viral.

Since it’s 2014, pretty much everything that goes viral is eventually turned into a song and uploaded to YouTube, and Ginsburg’s dissent is no exception.

The video is the work of singer/songwriter Jonathan Mann, who manages to make earworms out of lines like, ‟It bares note that the cost of an IUD is nearly equivalent to a month’s full time pay for workers making minimum wage” and ‟Any decision to use contraceptives is not propelled by the government its the woman's autonomous choice informed by her doctor." This is no easy feat.

The song primarily uses lines from Ginsburg’s dissent as its lyrics, but Mann managed to add his own creative spin. At least, we’re pretty sure the former American Civil Liberties Union general counsel didn’t actually use the term ‟slut-shaming geezers” herself.